Your notebook (as per HP) supported XP and 2000 and specifically does not support Vista (therefore not 7), is not too new, and your video is integrated.If you are running windows 7 without a problem (it may have taken quite a lot of looking for all of your drivers), you might want to take an image of your drive and copy it to an external hard drive (as your easy recovery drive) to protect your efforts.As far as the video, if this is the latest driver for your graphics (and it appears it is), about the only other thing you can do that should help, is add more memory - RAM - if it supports more. Notebooks are not typically great on the graphics, only some of the more powerful laptops are available with upgraded graphics with dedicated graphics memory (much easier with desktops).

I am not sure if windows controls that, but I suspect there might be settings in your BIOS that control the shared memory. The only problem is that you are already running at the minimum for windows 7, so you would not want to short that either. If you do find a setting, try just a little bit change at a time. Video actually gets a better boost from FASTER memory, than from more memory after some point. Are you running the fastest memory you can? That might also help. -- Remember, your machine was never meant for gaming.You may have reached it's peak already.

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